ts-options-defaults
Object.assign({}, defaults, options)
and equivalent with destructing {...defaults, ...options}
come with a pitfall of creating only a shallow copy. Lodash _.merge
works on deep properties, but it merges arrays and that usually makes no sense in the context of default options (also it mutates first element; this package doesn't). ts-options-defaults fixes that problem - it merges objects deeply, overrides arrays and classes (different than Object) plus the result remains strongly typed.
Options-defaults design pattern implementation for reliable configuration.
Usage
npm i ts-options-defaults
Design pattern
import { defaults } from 'ts-options-defaults';
export interface ISomeOptions {
logger?: Partial<Console>;
}
export class Something {
static defaults = {
logger: console,
};
options: ISomeOptions & typeof Something.defaults;
constructor(options?: ISomeOptions) {
this.options = defaults(Rat.defaults, options);
}
}
Behavior
import { defaults } from '../src';
class TestLogger {
constructor(public name = `TestLogger`) {}
log() {
console.log(`Call from ${this.name}`);
}
}
const someDefaults = {
console,
nested: {
property: 'default',
shouldBeDefault: 'default',
array: ['default1', 'default2'],
},
};
const someOptions = {
nested: {
property: 'overriden',
array: ['overriden1'],
},
array: ['overriden'],
};
const options = defaults(
someDefaults,
someOptions,
{
console: {
log: () => {
console.log(`TEST`);
},
},
},
{
console: new TestLogger(),
},
);
options.console.log(`log`);
options.console.debug(`debug`);
{
"nested": {
"property": "overriden",
"shouldBeDefault": "default",
"array": [
"overriden1"
]
},
"array": [
"overriden"
]
}